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NHL roundup: Owners vote to lock out players

With the collective bargaining agreement set to expire at midnight ET on Saturday, owners have unanimously voted to support a lockout and no new negotiations have been scheduled.

"We spoke today and determined that there was no point in convening a formal bargaining session in light of the fact that neither side is in a position to move off of its last proposal," NHL Deputy Commissioner Bill Daly said in a statement.

"I'm sure we will keep in touch in the coming days and schedule meetings to the extent they might be useful or appropriate. We are sorry for where we are. Not what we hoped or expected."

The NHL and the NHL Players Association last met on Wednesday, and the NHLPA was denied its request for an immediate injunction against the impending lockout by the Quebec Labour Relations Board on Friday. However, the board plans to continue to hear the case, ESPNNewYork.com reported.

Steve Fehr, the brother of NHLPA executive director Donald Fehr, told ESPN that he and several players on the negotiating committee were in New York and prepared to meet, and that there have been "informal discussions" between the sides.

The owners imposed the Saturday deadline, and Commissioner Gary Bettman has long stated that the league had no intention of operating another season under the current CBA terms. The regular season is slated to begin Oct. 11 and training camps are due to open next week, but those plans are all on hold.

This would mark the fourth work stopped in the NHL since 1992, including the one the wiped out the 2004-05 season. In order to end that impasse, the players accepted a salary-cap system and a 24 percent rollback of existing contracts in exchange for 57 percent of hockey-related revenues.

At issue now is Bettman's contention that hockey management wants economic gains and that the 57 percent figure is too high, while the NHLPA believes the revenue-sharing formula needs to be reexamined and that the players should not be asked to make further concessions. The league's first offer was a reduction to 43 percent of hockey-related revenues, although that has since risen to at least 46 percent in recent negotiations. Meanwhile, the players are seeking a deal that would guarantee at least the $1.8 billion in salaries paid out in the 2011-12 season annually, according to multiple reports.

The players were prompted to make their Friday case that any lockout imposed by the league would be illegal since their union is not recognized as certified under Quebec labor law.

The board held an emergency hearing Friday morning on behalf of 16 players from the Montreal Canadiens who made the filing. It later rejected the players request to delay any work stoppage imposed by the league's owners.

"We are pleased with the ruling that the Commission released tonight," NHLPA general counsel Don Zavelo said in a statement Friday. "While the Commission denied the players' request for emergency relief, it also rejected the NHL's request to dismiss the case. The ruling acknowledges that the players have raised issues about the legality of the NHL's planned lockout that require a full hearing on the merits.

"We remain confident that the lockout is prohibited by the Quebec Labour Code and look forward to presenting our case to the Commission in the near future. Should the NHL carry out its threat to lock out the players in Quebec, it will do so at its own risk."

The players are still looking for other means of stalling the lockout. Several Edmonton Oilers and Calgary Flames players appealed to the Alberta Labour Relations Board to challenge a work stoppage. The board confirmed that a meeting will be held on Sept. 21.

---The Boston Bruins signed forward Milan Lucic to a three-year contract extension through the 2015-16 season, the team announced Saturday.

The deal is worth $18 million, according to NHL.com, citing multiple media reports.

Lucic, who has played all his 359 NHL games with the Bruins, has 90 goals and 122 assists in his career. He collected 26 goals and 35 assists in 81 games last season.

The Bruins have had a busy week, also having signed Brad Marchand and Tyler Seguin to multiyear contracts.

---The Buffalo Sabres re-signed restricted free agent forward Tyler Ennis to a two-year contract, according to NHL.com.

The deal is worth $5.625 million, the Buffalo News reported Saturday.

"Tyler is a very important part of our offense and we are very happy to have him signed," Sabres general manager Darcy Regier said in a statement. "He has progressed as a player over the past few seasons and we are excited to see his growth, both as a person and professional, in the years to come."

Ennis, a first-round pick of the Sabres in 2008, has 38 goals and 54 assists in 140 games. He had 15 goals and 19 assists in 48 games last season while battling an ankle injury in the first half.

Ennis is slated to be the Sabres starting center after the offseason trade of Derek Roy to the Dallas Stars.